Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest Park

Nature proximity contributes to improving many people’s health. In urban areas, how to increase the gaining of health benefits from urban green space (UGS) has gradually become a topic of concern for urban planners and public health practitioners. However, studies that can make causal inferences and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jialin He, Li Li, Jiaming Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-03-01
Series:Buildings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/12/4/397
_version_ 1797436631845699584
author Jialin He
Li Li
Jiaming Li
author_facet Jialin He
Li Li
Jiaming Li
author_sort Jialin He
collection DOAJ
description Nature proximity contributes to improving many people’s health. In urban areas, how to increase the gaining of health benefits from urban green space (UGS) has gradually become a topic of concern for urban planners and public health practitioners. However, studies that can make causal inferences and evidence from developing countries and societies are still limited, and little has been done to address the issue of equity. Using data gathered in face-to-face surveys from 997 visitors to the Beijing Olympic Forest Park, we applied the instrumental variable approach to analyze park visit benefits to human physical and mental health, and explore ways that can help motivate visits and enhance equitable use. The results show that the overweight had more frequent visits, indicating that people with less-than-ideal health status might feel the urgency in improving their health and choose to engage in more recreation. In this sense, UGS showed a tendency to provide means for a certain group of people to proactively improve health. The study also solidifies the mid-term stress-relieving effect of park recreation that increased with visiting frequency, and found that visits to different types of UGS should all be beneficial, and do not have to be to large green parks. While distance is a decisive factor in encouraging UGS visits, route friendliness was found to have a complementing role, implying that creating routes to UGS that are more conducive to non-motorized travel (walking and cycling) could be seen as an important instrument. Both the incentives to park visitation and stress-relieving effect are more pronounced in elder groups, indicating higher potentials of such an approach in cities with an aging population. In terms of equity, differences in knowledge and income levels associated with use levels indicated inequitable use. To promote inclusiveness, the policy could start by increasing people’s recognition of health benefits derived from UGS recreation through for example publicity programs. The study could bring implications for planning practitioners to leverage health potentials from increased and equitable use of UGS. Limitations of the study includes: (1) given the nature of cross-sectional data, the possibility of two-way causality cannot be ruled out, and (2) the study was conducted in one park and only park visitors were surveyed. In the future, researchers could consider conducting multi-period surveys, and to look at the city level to include all kinds of recreational UGS, and, if possible, to cover all residents.
first_indexed 2024-03-09T11:04:27Z
format Article
id doaj.art-ba720c58b0114062999f8421271f6b12
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2075-5309
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-09T11:04:27Z
publishDate 2022-03-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Buildings
spelling doaj.art-ba720c58b0114062999f8421271f6b122023-12-01T01:00:53ZengMDPI AGBuildings2075-53092022-03-0112439710.3390/buildings12040397Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest ParkJialin He0Li Li1Jiaming Li2Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research (CAS), Beijing 100101, ChinaKey Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research (CAS), Beijing 100101, ChinaKey Lab of Regional Sustainable Development Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research (CAS), Beijing 100101, ChinaNature proximity contributes to improving many people’s health. In urban areas, how to increase the gaining of health benefits from urban green space (UGS) has gradually become a topic of concern for urban planners and public health practitioners. However, studies that can make causal inferences and evidence from developing countries and societies are still limited, and little has been done to address the issue of equity. Using data gathered in face-to-face surveys from 997 visitors to the Beijing Olympic Forest Park, we applied the instrumental variable approach to analyze park visit benefits to human physical and mental health, and explore ways that can help motivate visits and enhance equitable use. The results show that the overweight had more frequent visits, indicating that people with less-than-ideal health status might feel the urgency in improving their health and choose to engage in more recreation. In this sense, UGS showed a tendency to provide means for a certain group of people to proactively improve health. The study also solidifies the mid-term stress-relieving effect of park recreation that increased with visiting frequency, and found that visits to different types of UGS should all be beneficial, and do not have to be to large green parks. While distance is a decisive factor in encouraging UGS visits, route friendliness was found to have a complementing role, implying that creating routes to UGS that are more conducive to non-motorized travel (walking and cycling) could be seen as an important instrument. Both the incentives to park visitation and stress-relieving effect are more pronounced in elder groups, indicating higher potentials of such an approach in cities with an aging population. In terms of equity, differences in knowledge and income levels associated with use levels indicated inequitable use. To promote inclusiveness, the policy could start by increasing people’s recognition of health benefits derived from UGS recreation through for example publicity programs. The study could bring implications for planning practitioners to leverage health potentials from increased and equitable use of UGS. Limitations of the study includes: (1) given the nature of cross-sectional data, the possibility of two-way causality cannot be ruled out, and (2) the study was conducted in one park and only park visitors were surveyed. In the future, researchers could consider conducting multi-period surveys, and to look at the city level to include all kinds of recreational UGS, and, if possible, to cover all residents.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/12/4/397equitymegacitymental healthphysical healthUGS recreationBeijing
spellingShingle Jialin He
Li Li
Jiaming Li
Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest Park
Buildings
equity
megacity
mental health
physical health
UGS recreation
Beijing
title Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest Park
title_full Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest Park
title_fullStr Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest Park
title_full_unstemmed Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest Park
title_short Generating Inclusive Health Benefits from Urban Green Spaces: An Empirical Study of Beijing Olympic Forest Park
title_sort generating inclusive health benefits from urban green spaces an empirical study of beijing olympic forest park
topic equity
megacity
mental health
physical health
UGS recreation
Beijing
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/12/4/397
work_keys_str_mv AT jialinhe generatinginclusivehealthbenefitsfromurbangreenspacesanempiricalstudyofbeijingolympicforestpark
AT lili generatinginclusivehealthbenefitsfromurbangreenspacesanempiricalstudyofbeijingolympicforestpark
AT jiamingli generatinginclusivehealthbenefitsfromurbangreenspacesanempiricalstudyofbeijingolympicforestpark